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Gold surges above $5,400 after Trump’s Iran strikes, could prices hit $6,000 next?

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Gold surges above $5,400 after Trump’s Iran strikes, could prices hit $6,000 next?

Gold has surged back above $5,400 an ounce in early trading following US missile strikes on Iran, prompting fresh speculation over whether the precious metal could break through $6,000 in the coming weeks.

The renewed rally comes after a volatile start to the year for bullion. Gold hit a record high of more than $5,550 in late January, before tumbling sharply to around $4,700 by early February. Silver followed a similar path, sliding from above $120 to roughly $82. Both metals are now climbing again, with silver edging back toward $100.

The latest spike follows coordinated US and Israeli strikes on Iran over the weekend, which reportedly killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and triggered retaliatory action by Tehran against US allies in the Gulf. Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz,  a critical artery for global oil supplies, have intensified, pushing oil and safe-haven assets higher.

Market analysts describe the situation as a “classic risk-off scenario”, with investors flocking to traditional stores of value amid fears of broader regional escalation, oil supply disruption and renewed inflationary pressures.

Cameron Parry, founder and CEO of TallyMoney, said the moves were entirely consistent with previous geopolitical crises.

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“Both the oil and gold price were up Monday morning, as the Strait of Hormuz and safe-haven assets became the point of focus for markets,” he said. “Geopolitical crises like the one unfolding currently will invariably apply upward pressure on the gold price and that’s precisely what is happening this time round.

“We are in a classic risk-off scenario and gold is the classic go-to asset. Gold was already benefiting from strong demand globally, not just from central banks but also retail investors keen to get exposure in an increasingly volatile geopolitical climate.

“That demand could now spike further as nations and individuals alike seek the safety of the world’s ultimate store of value. Few would bet against gold.”

Riz Malik, director at R3 Wealth, said the scale of any further gains would depend heavily on how long the conflict lasts and how Iran responds.

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“Monday morning immediately saw a sharp rise in the demand for gold,” he said. “How much it will rise will depend on how prolonged this campaign is and the level of the Iranian retaliation.

“Once again global instability has been pushed to Defcon 4 and that only means one thing for precious metals. Namely, their price is set to go up.”

However, not all analysts believe a rapid surge to $6,000 is imminent.

Tony Redondo, founder at Cosmos Currency Exchange, said that while the $6,000 mark is conceivable in the near term, it would require sustained escalation.

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“Even before Saturday’s military operations in Iran, the price of gold had catapulted up to the $5,300 level, but hitting $6,000 by next week would require a 15 per cent surge, a feat usually reserved for total systemic collapse,” he said.

“However, while $6,000 is unlikely within days, it is a high-probability target for March or April, especially if the Strait of Hormuz is compromised on a longer-term basis or the conflict broadens.”

Redondo added that silver’s structural supply deficit could amplify its price reaction. “Silver is closing in on $100 and its supply constraints make $120 a realistic target in the months ahead as a coiled spring reaction to geopolitical fear,” he said, cautioning that sharp rallies often invite profit-taking.

Others argue that while geopolitical shocks can act as catalysts, deeper macroeconomic forces will ultimately determine gold’s trajectory.

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Anita Wright, chartered financial planner at Ribble Wealth Management, said structural pressures in the US financial system were equally important.

“This weekend’s missile strikes will undoubtedly affect the gold price, but it is important not to confuse a catalyst with the underlying driver,” she said. “Gold does not move to $6,000 because of a single weekend’s events. It moves there, if it does, because of monetary conditions.

“The US faces trillions in refinancing requirements alongside persistent fiscal deficits. Foreign appetite for US Treasuries shows visible strain, long-dated yields are rising, and equity valuations remain stretched. History tells us that when bond yields rise into an overvalued equity market, instability follows.”

Wright said that while an immediate jump to $6,000 was unlikely, materially higher gold prices over the medium term were plausible if bond market stress intensifies and the Federal Reserve returns to liquidity support.

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Nouran Moustafa, practice principal and IFA at Roxton Wealth, urged investors not to chase sharp moves driven by headlines.

“Gold was expected to open higher as investors moved into safe havens after the latest escalation, and so it did,” she said. “However, a jump to $6,000 in days would require something far more severe such as direct energy supply disruption or broader financial market stress.

“Without that, we’re more likely to see sharp volatility than a sustained vertical rally.”

She warned that emotional investing during times of geopolitical stress can be costly. “Gold can act as portfolio insurance, but chasing rapid spikes rarely ends well. Sensible allocation and risk management matter more than reacting emotionally to breaking news.”

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With tensions in the Middle East showing little sign of easing and global markets already on edge, gold’s next move will likely hinge on whether the conflict remains contained — or spills into something far more disruptive for energy markets and global growth.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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ADT Inc. (ADT) Q4 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

ADT Inc. (ADT) Q4 2025 Earnings Call March 2, 2026 10:00 AM EST

Company Participants

Elizabeth Landers – Investor Relations Officer
James DeVries – CEO, President & Chairman
Omar Khan – Executive VP & Chief Business Officer
Jeffrey Likosar – CFO and President of Corporate Development & Transformation

Conference Call Participants

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Keen Fai Tong – Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Research Division
Peter Christiansen – Citigroup Inc., Research Division
John Ronan Kennedy – Barclays Bank PLC, Research Division
Ashish Sabadra – RBC Capital Markets, Research Division
Gregory Parrish – Morgan Stanley, Research Division

Presentation

Operator

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Thank you for standing by, and welcome to the ADT Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions]

I’d now like to turn the call over to Elizabeth Landers, Vice President, Investor Relations. You may begin.

Elizabeth Landers
Investor Relations Officer

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Good morning, and thank you for joining us today to discuss ADT’s fourth quarter and full year results. Speaking on today’s call are Jim DeVries, ADT’s Chairman, President and CEO; Jeff Likosar, our CFO; and Omar Khan, our Chief Business Officer.

We are structuring today’s call a bit differently with the majority of the call focused on our strategy and key priorities to position ADT for the future. Jim will start with a broad strategic update, focusing on how we’re reshaping the future of smart home security. Omar will then describe more about our recent acquisition of Origin AI, and then Jeff will briefly describe our 2025 financial results as well as our long-range financial outlook and capital allocation priorities. After their prepared remarks, we’ll open the call for analyst questions.

This morning, we issued a press release and presentation summarizing our financial results. Both are available at investor.adt.com. We’ll reference our non-GAAP financial measures today. Reconciliations to the most comparable GAAP measures are included in the earnings presentation on our

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Ted Sarandos speaks out on why Netflix dropped bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery

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Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos to testify on $72 billion Warner Bros merger deal

Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said Sunday he knew “right away” he would decline to counter Paramount’s winning attempt to buy Warner Bros. Discovery, admitting rival chief executive David Ellison made a superior offer. 

Netflix dropped its bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery on Thursday after the company announced Paramount’s latest bid to buy all of its assets, including CNN, was “superior.”

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“We had a very tight range that we’d be willing to pay and made that offer back when we closed this deal. We hadn’t moved much from that, except for moving to cash, which served to move the deal faster. I’m happy where we got in and happy where we got out,” Sarandos told Bloomberg

“We knew right away, when we got the notice on Thursday that they had a superior offer and the details of that deal,” he continued. “We knew exactly what we were going to do.” 

NETFLIX BACKS OUT OF WARNER BROS BIDDING WAR AFTER PARAMOUNT MADE ‘SUPERIOR’ OFFER

Ted Sarandos Netflix CEO

Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said he knew “right away” he would decline to counter Paramount’s latest attempt to buy Warner Bros. Discovery. (David Benito/FilmMagic via Getty Images / Getty Images)

In December, Warner Bros. announced it had reached a deal with Netflix to buy the Hollywood studio and HBO for $83 billion, prompting Paramount to launch a $108 billion hostile takeover bid for the entire company, including all of its cable assets like CNN, which would have been spun off into a separate company under the Netflix deal.

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Sarandos suggested that President Donald Trump was largely interested in the deal because of CNN, the news network that he has long criticized. 

“Once it was clear that we weren’t in the CNN business, it was a lot less interesting. He didn’t care that much more about our deal,” he said.

Sarandos predicted that Paramount Skydance Corp. will ultimately need to slash a significant number of jobs. His comment came after CNN insiders told Fox News Digital that staffers feel “a mix of despair, apprehension and curiosity” as they await details. 

“It would be less production, less people working,” Sarandos told Bloomberg. 

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MOOD IS ‘HORRIFIC’ INSIDE CNN AS STAFFERS BRACE FOR CHANGE AMID POTENTIAL PARAMOUNT TAKEOVER, INSIDERS SAY

ted sarandos netflix co-ceo

Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos told Bloomberg he was “happy where we got out” of the bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery. (Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix / Getty Images)

Paramount’s revised offer raised WBD’s value to $31 per share, putting the company’s valuation at $111 billion. Paramount will additionally pay the $2.8 billion termination fee to Netflix after WBD backed out of their deal.

Ellison’s billionaire father, Larry Ellison, is personally backing Paramount’s bid, committing $45.7 billion in equity through the Ellison Trust, while Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citi and Apollo will provide a $57.5 billion debt commitment.

The Netflix honcho also said Paramount has major regulatory hurdles to clear.

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“Even when we were thinking about keeping these businesses together and running, we knew that we had a difficult task ahead of integration. I can’t imagine doing all that and trying to cut billions and billions of dollars. Today, Paramount has half of the people that they had one year ago. So that gives you some sense of where this is heading for the town and for the business,” Sarandos said. 

Last month, Trump called on Netflix to fire board member Susan Rice immediately or “pay the consequences” after the former Obama official warned that corporations she said had “taken a knee” to Republican pressure should not expect forgiveness from Democrats if they return to power.

PARAMOUNT REFUSES TO BACK DOWN IN WARNER BROS. DISCOVERY TAKEOVER FIGHT AGAINST NETFLIX

Trump points during campaign rally

President Donald Trump largely lost interest in the Netflix deal once CNN wasn’t involved, according to Ted Sarandos.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Sarandos told Bloomberg he spoke with Rice but never considered removing her from the board. 

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CNN has largely embraced anti-Trump programming for much of the last decade, and the president has responded by publicly criticizing the network on a regular basis. Last year, The Wall Street Journal reported that Ellison told Trump officials that he’d make sweeping changes to CNN if he became its owner. 

One CNN insider said they were trying to keep an “open mind” but said it’s easy to understand why staffers are upset given the reporting on Ellison and Trump discussing changes.

“It’s existential for the brand to be owned by an individual who has personal allegiance to a political figure and is not even answering to public markets,” they told Fox News Digital

The White House didn’t immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

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Fox News Digital’s Joseph A. Wulfsohn contributed to this report. 

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Gold Climbs Above $5,300 an Ounce. Where It Goes Next Amid Middle East Fighting.

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Edwards Lifesciences Corporation (EW) Presents at TD Cowen 46th Annual Health Care Conference Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Edwards Lifesciences Corporation (EW) TD Cowen 46th Annual Health Care Conference March 2, 2026 9:50 AM EST

Company Participants

Scott Ullem – Corporate VP & CFO

Conference Call Participants

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Joshua Jennings – TD Cowen, Research Division

Presentation

Joshua Jennings
TD Cowen, Research Division

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We’re going to get started here as we’re moving down the medical devices company presentation, fireside chat track at the 46th Annual TD Cowen Healthcare Conference. I’m Josh Jennings from the TD Cowen Medical Devices team, and we are honored to have Edwards’ CFO, Scott Ullem, joining us making the track out from the West Coast. Scott, thanks so much for being here.

Scott Ullem
Corporate VP & CFO

That’s our pleasure, and I’m here with my colleague, Gerianne Sarte, who’s going to be taking over as Head of Investor Relations in April.

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Joshua Jennings
TD Cowen, Research Division

Thank you for introducing her. I’m sorry, I didn’t introduce you, myself. I’ve got mixed emotions here at this — you’ve been the regular attendee and your team of the TD Cowen Healthcare Conference. And this may be the last time we get to have a chat up here on stage.

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Scott Ullem
Corporate VP & CFO

Well, I haven’t been here for all 46 of your annual investor conferences, but it’s always a pleasure to be here. Thanks, Josh.

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Question-and-Answer Session

Joshua Jennings
TD Cowen, Research Division

Thanks, Scott. And maybe to start, just maybe the succession path and the process, any updates there? I mean it seems like there has been some restructuring in the — some of the big executives at Edwards over the past couple of years with Mike Mussallem leaving, Larry Wood leaving and now you’re departing as well. But I think in each instance, the executive’s departure was — the basis was you’re leaving the company in a good position and you have a strong team

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S&P 500 Slides as Middle East Conflict Drives Oil Surge and Risk Aversion

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The tech sector led record gains in the S&P 500 index. Pictured: a man with umbrella walks past the New York Stock Exchange.

NEW YORK — The S&P 500 (^GSPC) extended losses into early March 2026 trading, pressured by escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East following U.S. and Israeli military strikes on Iran, which sent oil prices sharply higher and prompted a flight to safe-haven assets.

The benchmark index closed at 6,878.88 on Feb. 27, down 29.98 points or 0.43%, capping a volatile week that saw broader market retreats amid renewed inflation concerns from surging energy costs. On March 2, futures indicated further downside, with S&P 500 contracts sliding around 1% pre-market before opening lower, trading near 6,855-6,856 levels in early sessions with intraday ranges dipping to approximately 6,796 before partial recovery attempts.

The tech sector led record gains in the S&P 500 index. Pictured: a man with umbrella walks past the New York Stock Exchange.
S&P 500 index

The pullback reflects a classic risk-off environment triggered by weekend military actions. U.S. and Israeli forces targeted Iranian sites in what has been described as “Operation Epic Fury,” prompting fears of prolonged conflict, potential disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz — through which about one-fifth of global oil flows — and retaliatory measures. Brent crude surged as much as 8-13% at peaks, trading near $79-$82 per barrel early in the week, while West Texas Intermediate climbed toward $72-$73, marking multi-month highs and amplifying worries about sticky inflation.

Gold futures rallied over 3%, surpassing recent levels as investors sought protection, while the U.S. dollar strengthened against major currencies. The VIX, Wall Street’s fear gauge, elevated toward 20, signaling heightened volatility as traders braced for developments.

“The combination of geopolitical escalation and an oil shock is forcing a rapid repricing of risk,” one market analyst commented in a Monday note. “Higher energy prices threaten to delay any Federal Reserve easing cycle, putting pressure on valuations across equities, especially in growth-sensitive sectors.”

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The S&P 500 has shown resilience earlier in 2026, with year-to-date performance modestly positive in some calculations around 0.5% to 1% despite February’s softness. The index ended the prior month lower overall, influenced by softer sentiment in AI and technology names amid broader rotation. However, the latest catalyst has accelerated the defensive shift, with energy and select industrial names providing relative outperformance while consumer discretionary, tech-heavy constituents and airlines faced headwinds from elevated fuel costs.

Broader indices mirrored the caution. The Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dropped over 500 points at one point, while the Nasdaq Composite — already under pressure from prior sessions — saw amplified declines due to its growth orientation. European and Asian markets opened sharply lower, with some benchmarks down 1-2% as the conflict’s global implications rippled outward.

Analysts noted that persistent oil elevation could complicate the economic soft-landing narrative that buoyed stocks through much of the cycle. Recent Producer Price Index data had already introduced hotter-than-expected inflation readings, and the energy spike risks reinforcing those trends ahead of key labor market reports and corporate earnings.

Despite the near-term turbulence, longer-term optimism lingers for some observers. The S&P 500 remains above key technical supports, including its upward-sloping 10-month exponential moving average in certain analyses, suggesting the broader uptrend intact unless escalation materially worsens. Defensive sectors like consumer staples have shown relative strength in recent rotations, while international exposure via emerging markets or Europe has outperformed in spots amid diversification plays.

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Investors continue monitoring diplomatic channels for de-escalation signals, alongside upcoming economic releases that could influence Fed policy expectations. Any stabilization in the Middle East or cooling in oil markets might support a rebound in risk assets, though prolonged uncertainty keeps caution front and center.

The index’s valuation, trading at levels reflecting forward earnings growth tempered by macroeconomic risks, appears balanced for total return seekers willing to weather volatility. Consensus views maintain a constructive stance on U.S. large-caps, with emphasis on quality names resilient to energy shocks and potential rate path adjustments.

As March trading unfolds, the S&P 500’s performance will hinge on the trajectory of the conflict, commodity prices and incoming data. For now, the market digests the geopolitical shock, balancing growth potential against immediate headwinds from higher costs and uncertainty.

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Abbott warns Iranian ‘sleeper cells’ inside US must be taken ‘seriously’

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Abbott warns Iranian ‘sleeper cells’ inside US must be taken ‘seriously’

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott warned that Iranian “sleeper cells” operating inside the United States pose a serious threat following Operation Epic Fury, saying the danger must be taken “seriously” as the Lone Star State ramps up security efforts.

“You oftentimes see when there’s a war breaking out like this, where the United States may be going against a country like Iran, that you could have either sleeper [cells] or lone wolves acting,” Abbott told “Mornings with Maria” on Monday.

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“That’s exactly why we increased the number of Texas Department of Public Safety officers to be patrolling the streets and patrolling sensitive areas and why I deployed the Texas National Guard to do the same thing,” he said.

FBI RAISES COUNTERTERROR TEAMS TO HIGH ALERT AMID IRAN TENSIONS

Texas governor speaks at a podium inside the Capitol alongside federal officials.

Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaks during a news conference with U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins at the Texas Capitol in Austin on Aug. 15, 2025. (Jay Janner/Austin American-Statesman via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Heightened tensions followed a deadly shooting in Austin early Sunday, when suspect Ndiaga Diagne, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Senegal, opened fire near a bar in the downtown area, killing two and injuring 14 others.

Diagne wore a sweater reading “PROPERTY OF ALLAH” during the attack.

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According to media reports, law enforcement officials found the flag of the Islamic Republic of Iran and photos of its leaders in his home.

IRAN REGIME ‘ABOUT TO COLLAPSE,’ PRINCE REZA PAHLAVI SAYS AS ECONOMIC CRISIS DEEPENS

Demonstrator holding Iranian flag and photo of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

A demonstrator holding portrait of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reacts outside the City Hall during a protest against U.S. and Israeli attacks on multiple cities across Iran on February 28, 2026, in Los Angeles, Calif.  (Qian Weizhong/VCG/Getty Images / Getty Images)

“There are other details that will be coming out about the shooter and his connections to terrorism that will make clear [that] this was a lone wolf activity where this shooter intended to wreak havoc here in Texas, here in the United States, because of his ties and sympathies with Iran,” Abbott said.

Abbott and other Republicans have long cautioned against the consequences of open borders under the Biden administration. He echoed those warnings during his FOX Business appearance, telling Maria Bartiromo the shooting raises other questions.

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“It calls into question a lot of people like that who are here in the United Sates, who came from other countries,” he said.

“The United States has to do a far better job in trying to vet and… ongoingly evaluate those who have come to our country who could pose a danger.”

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Fox News Digital’s Asra Q. Nomani contributed to this report.

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